“A Rajah has the same lordly indifference to collisions as has the driver of a Pickford’s van, and for a similar reason - because he knows that he at least can take no harm to speak of.”
The (London) Daily News January 18th, 1876.
Pickfords drivers were notorious for their ‘lordly indifference’. They were the kings of the Victorian road and were forever getting into scrapes. Their vans/wagons displayed a number to enable the easier identification of their drivers.
I mention this in connection with the suggestion that in 1876 Charles Lechmere used the ‘alias’ Cross when he gave evidence at the inquest I to the death of the child he had run over in Islington (assuming that Pickford’s man to have been Charles Lechmere). The key thing here is whether it is plausible that Pickfords would have been happy for him to have used a name they were unfamiliar with.
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